Re: Dynamic & Static IP Address
- From: Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 02 Jul 2005 21:47:40 GMT
On Sat, 02 Jul 2005 21:14:41 GMT, "Charlie" <Charlie@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
>I am running a home network with multiple Windows XP machines attached to
>the Internet with a Linksys WRT54GS router with the DHCP function turned on.
That's the normal way a router is setup.
>Is it
>possible to have one of my machines use a static IP address instead of the
>one leased by the router.
Yes. I do it all the time. Devices that do not move around (network
printers, print server, gateways, TIVO boxes, weather stations, etc)
should generally have staticly assigned IP addresses.
>I know how to setup a static ip address, and I am
>using a number in the same subnet mask but I can't get access to the
>Internet. Any help would be appreciated.
I *HATE* the word "access" as it doesn't tell me anything about the
problem. My guess(tm) is that you have everything correct except the
DNS servers. Your "access" problem is an inability to resolve address
names into IP addresses.
If you know how to setup your IP address, you're close. I'll assume
Windoze XP Home.
1. Select an IP address that is NOT in the DHCP address range.
Linksys uses 192.168.1.100 thur .150. Stay out of that range.
2. Select an IP address that is NOT duplicated anywhere else on your
network.
3. The netmask should be 255.255.255.0
4. The gateway address is the address of your router, usually
192.168.1.1 for Linksys.
5. The DNS servers can be either the address of the router or the
real DNS servers as provided by your ISP. For the WRT54GS, either
will work.
You neglected to specify *WHY* you are assigning a static IP address.
My guess(tm) is that you are using remote desktop, PC Anywhere, or
other server application on this computer, and need a static IP
address to insure that the router port forwarding goes to the correct
computer. There's a much easier way to do this.
1. Setup the computer for DHCP assigned IP addresses.
2. Dive into the Linksys router setup and look for the "static DHCP"
configuration section on the bottom of the DHCP page.
3. Find the computer by its MAC addresses and assign it a "static
DHCP" IP address that is inside the DHCP assigned range.
4. Save the router config.
This will insure that the router DHCP server will reserve this IP
address for the specific MAC address of the computer and will not
assign it to any other device.
--
# Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D Santa Cruz CA 95060
# 831.336.2558 voice http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
# jeffl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
# jeffl@xxxxxxxxxx AE6KS
.
- References:
- Dynamic & Static IP Address
- From: Charlie
- Dynamic & Static IP Address
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